The .get() method grants access to the DOM nodes underlying each jQuery object. If the value of index is out of bounds — less than the negative number of elements or equal to or greater than the number of elements — it returns undefined. Consider a simple unordered list:

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<ul>

<liid="foo">foo</li>

<liid="bar">bar</li>

</ul>

With an index specified, .get( index ) retrieves a single element:

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console.log( $( "li" ).get( 0 ) );

Since the index is zero-based, the first list item is returned:

<li id="foo">

Each jQuery object also masquerades as an array, so we can use the array dereferencing operator to get at the list item instead:

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console.log( $( "li" )[ 0 ] );

However, this syntax lacks some of the additional capabilities of .get(), such as specifying a negative index:

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console.log( $( "li" ).get( -1 ) );

A negative index is counted from the end of the matched set, so this example returns the last item in the list: